The Day

Pfizer says it will boost income limit for free drugs

More patients would be able to fill prescripti­ons without a co-payment, but program has critics

- By LINDA A. JOHNSON AP Business Writer

Trenton, N.J. — As the furor over soaring U.S. prescripti­on drug prices escalates and outrageous price hikes by several smaller drugmakers give the entire industry a black eye, the biggest U.S.-based drugmaker is expanding financial assistance to patients.

Pfizer Inc. says it’s doubling its income limit for people to receive dozens of its medicines without a copayment because more patients need help. Patients’ insurance plans generally must then pay the bulk of the drug’s cost. Some critics say this isn’t the best way to keep drugs affordable for everyone.

“It’s not addressing the price of the drug,” said Clare Krusing, a spokeswoma­n for the trade group America’s Health Insurance Plans.

“This is the wrong approach when you consider the cost impact that patients have on the back end,” said Krusing.

She said insurance plans eventually raise patients’ monthly premiums or other payments to compensate. One study of California plans early this year found most increases have been tiny — so far.

Krusing also noted widely used drugmaker coupon programs like Pfizer’s usually are only temporary. They cover patient copayments for a specific brand-name drug or limit them to $50 or so.

Such programs can increase overall medication costs, particular­ly if they nudge patients to stay on brandname drugs over cheaper generic versions. However, medicines often prevent expensive complicati­ons and hospitaliz­ations.

Pfizer’s move comes amid fierce criticism by patients and politician­s, as well as a growing number of government investigat­ions, of six-figure list prices for new medication­s for cancer, hepatitis C and rare diseases, and huge price hikes on old ones with little or no competitio­n.

Turing Pharmaceut­icals, which recently hiked by 5,000 percent the price for the only drug for a life-threatenin­g parasitic, has been accused of price gouging, along with Valeant Pharmaceut­icals Internatio­nal Inc. and a handful of other companies. Meanwhile, a surge of mergers of brand-name and generic drug manufactur­ers threatens to further limit competitio­n, the primary control on prices in the U.S.

Drugmakers now face a “wave of hearings and public beatings” over exorbitant drug prices, said pharmaceut­icals analyst Erik Gordon, a professor at University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business.

“If you’re Pfizer, you want to look like you’ve made a voluntary, charitable move before you get beat up” in a congressio­nal hearing, Gordon said.

Pfizer Chief Executive Ian Read told The Associated Press the New York company isn’t boosting assistance due to heightened scrutiny of prices, but because more and more patients can’t afford needed medicines.

“There are people who are falling through the cracks through no fault of their own,” Read said. “As a stopgap, we’re willing to do this.”

Read, the immediate past board chairman of industry trade group Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America, cited insurance plans now shifting more costs onto patients, plus some Affordable Care Act exchange plans and insurance formularie­s that exclude pricier prescripti­on drugs.

While insurers get big discounts off drug list prices, plans increasing­ly require patients to pay a large percentage of the price for ultra-expensive drugs — and cover all medicine and care costs until they’ve met their plan’s annual deductible or out-ofpocket maximum, often many thousands of dollars.

That’s impossible for many patients early in the year, when holiday bills arrive, said Marc Boutin, CEO of the National Health Council, which represents patients, insurers, drugmakers and other groups. He said deductible­s should be spread out over each year.

Most drugmakers offer patients financial assistance, particular­ly when pricey new drugs are first launched and the companies are trying to win over doctors and patients, to recoup their $1 billion-plus in developmen­t costs.

Also, the industry’s 20-year-old Partnershi­p for Prescripti­on Assistance connects patients to about 475 assistance programs, nearly 200 of them run by drugmakers. Visits to its site, www. pparx.org , rose 13 percent from January through October, to about 587,000,

Under the Pfizer RxPathways program, the company will cover patient copayments for 44 medicines for both uninsured and underinsur­ed patients earning up to four times the federal poverty level, up from twice that level. The new limits are $47,080 annually for a single person and $97,000 for a family of four.

The program covers many popular Pfizer brands: pain relievers Celebrex and Lyrica, smoking cessation aids Chantix and Nicotrol, Prevnar 13 pneumococc­al vaccine and erectile dysfunctio­n pill Viagra. Nearly 20 additional Pfizer medicines, including numerous expensive cancer drugs, already required no copayment for patients making up to four times the poverty level.

Last year, the RxPathways program helped about 350,000 patients. Pfizer expects to help a few hundred thousand more than that next year. Between 2010 and 2014, the program helped nearly 2.5 million people get more than 30 million Pfizer prescripti­ons worth more than $7 billion at list prices.

There’s no sign other drugmakers are expanding their assistance programs, and Gilead Sciences Inc., the maker of new hepatitis C medicines with list prices around $90,000 for a course of treatment, recently decreased the number of patients it is helping, forcing more costs onto insurers.

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